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Encyclopedia > Ben Shepherd

Ben Shepherd (born Hunter Benedict Shepherd) (September 20, 1968) is an American musician renowned for playing bass in the band Soundgarden from 1990 until the band's 1997 break-up.


He was born on an American military base in Okinawa, Japan. His family moved to Texas, then settled in Bainbridge Island, Washington where Shepherd grew up. Shepherd played in numerous punk-rock bands with friends before he was a teen-ager. After graduating high school, he worked as a carpenter and a laborer. He first auditioned for the role of bassist in Soundgarden in 1989, immediately after Hiro Yamamoto left, but was turned down because he could not play the songs well enough. Jason Everman was hired as the band's new bassist, but for unknown reasons, was fired immediately after Soundgarden completed their promotional tour in mid-1990. Shepherd was then hired.


In addition to his role as bass player, Shepherd wrote the lyrics and music to the song "Somewhere" on the band's 3rd album, Badmotorfinger. He also contributed to the musical composition of several of the other songs on that album.


In 1993, Shepherd and Soundgarden drummer Matt Cameron formed a side-project band called Hater. Shepherd sang vocals and played guitar in Hater, in addition to writing several songs on the band's first release; a self-titled album. Hater was still playing shows as a band after Soundgarden disbanded but, despite rumors to the contrary, a second album was recorded but not released. Hater disbanded in September of 1997.


In 1994, Soundgarden released Superunknown, which again featured Shepherd composing songs and writing lyrics. On this album, he wrote the words and lyrics to two songs: "Half" and "Head Down."


In 1996, Soundgarden released Down on the Upside, in which six of the sixteen album tracks were lyrically or musically composed by Shepherd. The tracks were: "Zero Chance," "Dusty," "Ty Cobb," "Never Named," "Switch Opens," and "An Unkind." Shepherd once said he wrote the music to "Never Named" as a teenager. "Ty Cobb" was the first song Shepherd wrote that was made a single.


In September 1997, Ben played bass for a band called Wellwater Conspiracy.


The book New Metal Crown (ISBN 0-312-13607-2), published in 1995, states that Shepherd is married and has a daughter.






  Results from FactBites:
 
Soundgarden (934 words)
He was briefly replaced by Jason Everman, formerly of Nirvana, who appeared on the Louder Than Live video, but Ben Shepherd ended up in the band as a permanent replacement.
At the tour's final stop in Honolulu, Hawaii in February of 1997, Shepherd threw his bass into the air in frustration after suffering equipment failure, and subsequently stormed off the stage.
Shepherd toured with Mark Lanegan and released the long overdue second Hater album in 2005, while also occasionally appearing on the Wellwater Conspiracy albums.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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